Augie Fleras的《加拿大移民:后国家世界中不断演变的现实和新出现的挑战》和Christine Kim的《种族的小亲密关系:北美的亚洲公众》(评论)

Pub Date : 2017-07-01 DOI:10.5860/choice.190161
R. Wong
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引用次数: 3

摘要

Augie Fieras,《加拿大移民:后国家世界中不断演变的现实和新出现的挑战》(温哥华:不列颠哥伦比亚大学出版社,2015年),544页$95.是978-0-7748-2679-2。纸张$39.95.ISBN 978-0-7748-2680-8.金,《种族的小亲密关系:北美的亚洲公众》(香槟:伊利诺伊大学出版社,2016),200页$95.ISBN 978-0-252-04013-9。纸张$30.ISBN 978-0-252-08162-0。克莉丝汀·金(Christine Kim)和奥吉·弗莱拉斯(Augie Fleras)的书深入探讨了加拿大多元文化和民族认同的可能性。金通过对小公众、公共空间及其可能产生的亲密关系的分析,探讨了移民加拿大和多元文化主义的内部因素和后果。Fleras通过追踪加拿大的移民模式以及加拿大移民政策和立法的后果,思考了当前加拿大的多元文化范式。在《种族的小亲密关系》一书中,金分析了加拿大银行试图在100美元钞票上出现一位亚洲女科学家的行为。正如金所说,这位亚洲长相的科学家并没有得到预览设计的最初焦点小组的大力支持,但得到的回应是,一位亚洲长相的女性很难代表加拿大或加拿大的价值观(第1-3页)。金用这种回应来证明,多元文化认同的政治并不一定像多元文化言论那样渗透到整个国家。也就是说,尽管加拿大自20世纪70年代末以来就采取了官方的多元文化政策,但在日常互动中对多元文化的认可尚未普及(否则,钞票上的亚洲科学家就不会因为没有恰当地代表加拿大而受到审查)。金的书的核心是公众的理念。金使用“主导公众”和“次要公众”的概念来强调社会亲密感和参与公众建设的感觉,尤其是次要公众。“亚裔加拿大人”一词往往是一个包罗万象的术语,用于描述各种种族或散居者,而没有注意到许多文化、语言、社会经济和地理差异。对金来说,“小公众”的概念代表了一群通过共同的经历、感受、社区和身份而聚集在一起的人(尽管金声称这与种族或族裔的概念无关)。金进一步借鉴了YouTube主流视频、推特“推文”、加拿大当地艺术家和加拿大当代文学,利用媒体强调了亚裔公众(其中许多人经常被包括在亚裔加拿大侨民中)如何被进一步细分为小公众。对金来说,感情很重要,因为只有参与者积极对话,小公众才能存在。它们比“亚裔加拿大人”等包罗万象的术语更为短暂和短暂,因此能够以非本质化的方式与参与者一起转变和进步。因此,小公众往往与多元文化言论不一致,这种言论承认但将所有少数群体与占主导地位的(白人)加拿大多数群体对立起来。值得注意的是,金与其说对阅读小公众而不是大公众感兴趣,不如说她转向了这些公众所产生的社会亲密感…
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Immigration Canada: Evolving Realities and Emerging Challenges in a Postnational World by Augie Fleras, and: The Minor Intimacies of Race: Asian Publics in North America by Christine Kim (review)
Augie Fieras, Immigration Canada: Evolving Realities and Emerging Challenges in a Postnational World (Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press, 2015), 544 pp. Cased. $95. ISBN 978-0-7748-2679-2. Paper. $39.95. ISBN 978-0-7748-2680-8.Christine Kim, The Minor Intimacies of Race: Asian Publics in North America (Champaign: University of Illinois Press, 2016), 200 pp. Cased. $95. ISBN 978-0-252-04013-9. Paper. $30. ISBN 978-0-252-08162-0.Christine Kim's and Augie Fleras's books enter into the multifarious conversation of Canadian multiculturalism and the possibility of a national identity. Kim examines the internal factors and consequences of immigration to Canada and multiculturalism through her analysis of minor publics, public spaces, and the intimacies they may produce. Fleras considers the current Canadian multicultural paradigm by tracing immigration patterns to Canada and the consequences of Canadian immigration policies and legislation.In The Minor Intimacies of Race, Kim sets up her work with an analysis of the Bank of Canada's attempts to feature an Asian female scientist on the $100 bill. As Kim relays, the Asian-looking scientist was not met with great favour by initial focus groups previewing the design, but rather the response was that an Asian-looking woman could hardly represent Canada or Canadian values (pp. 1-3). Kim uses this response to demonstrate how the politics of multicultural recognition does not necessarily permeate the nation to the degree to which multicultural rhetoric does. That is, although Canada has adopted official multicultural policies since the late 1970s, multicultural recognition in everyday interactions has not yet reached the masses (otherwise the Asian scientist on the bank note would not have been scrutinized for not properly representing Canada).Central to Kim's book is the idea of publics. Kim uses the concept of 'dominant publics' and 'minor publics' to highlight social intimacy and feeling involved in the construction of publics, but especially minor publics. The term 'Asian Canadian' tends to be a catchall term used to describe a variety of ethnic groups or diasporas without noting the many cultural, linguistic, socio-economic, and geographical differences. For Kim, the idea of a 'minor public' represents a group of people that is brought together through shared experiences, feelings, community, and identity (although Kim asserts that this is not inherently tied to notions of race or ethnicity). Drawing further from mainstream YouTube videos, Twitter 'tweets', local Canadian artists, and contemporary Canadian literature, Kim uses media to highlight how Asian publics, many of which are often included in an Asian Canadian diaspora, may indeed be broken down further into minor publics.For Kim, feelings matter because a minor public can only remain in existence as long as their participants are engaged in active dialogue. They are much more ephemeral and momentary than a catchall term such as 'Asian Canadian' and are thus able to transform and progress with its participants in a non-essentialising manner. Minor publics, then, are often at odds with multicultural rhetoric that acknowledges yet essentialises all minorities against a dominant (white) Canadian majority. It is worth noting that Kim is not so much interested in reading minor publics in opposition to major publics but rather she turns to the social intimacy these publics emerge from and within. …
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